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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (62701)6/9/2005 2:55:23 PM
From: SkywatcherRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 81568
 
Something Rotten in Ohio

by Gore Vidal
_________________________________________

This article will run in the July 4, 2005 issue of The Nation magazine.

_________________________________________

Outside the oil and gas junta that controls two and a half branches of our government (the half soon to be whole is the judiciary), there was a good deal of envy at the late British election among those Americans who are serious about politics. Little money was spent by the three parties and none for TV advertising. Results were achieved swiftly and cheaply. Best of all, the three party leaders were quizzed sharply and intelligently by ordinary citizens known quaintly as subjects, thanks to the ubiquitous phantom crown so unlike our nuclear-taloned predatory eagle. Although news of foreign countries seldom appears in our tightly censored media (and good news, never), those of us who are addicted to C-SPAN and find it the one truly, if unconsciously, subversive media outlet in these United States are able to observe British politics in full cry.

I say “subversive” not only because C-SPAN is apt to take interesting books seriously but also because of its live coverage of the Senate and the House of Representatives, the only look we are ever allowed at the mouthpieces of our masters up close and, at times, most reflective of a government more and more remote from us, unaccountable and repressive. To watch the righteous old prophet Byrd of West Virginia, the sunny hypocrisy of Biden of Delaware—as I write these hallowed names, I summon up their faces, hear their voices, and I am covered with C-SPAN goose bumps.

At any rate, wondrous C-SPAN has another string to its bow. While some executive was nodding, C-SPAN started showing us Britain’s House of Commons during Question Time. This is the only glimpse that most Americans will ever get of how democracy is supposed to work.

These party leaders are pitted against one another in often savage debate on subjects of war and peace, health and education. Then some 600 Members of Parliament are allowed to ask questions of their great chieftains. Years ago the incomparable Dwight Macdonald wrote that any letter to the London Times (the Brits are inveterate letter writers on substantive issues) is better written than any editorial in the New York Times.

In addition to Question Time, which allows Americans to see how political democracy works, as opposed to our two chambers of lobbyists for corporate America, C-SPAN also showed the three party leaders being interrogated by a cross section of, for the most part, youthful subjects of the phantom crown and presided over by an experienced po-lit-i-cal journalist. Blair was roughly accused of lying about the legal advice he had received apropos Britain’s right to go to war in Iraq for the US oil and gas junta. This BBC live audience asked far more informed and informative questions than the entire US press corps was allowed to ask Bush et al. in our recent election. But Americans are not used to challenging authority in what has been called wartime by a President who has ordered invasions of two countries that have done us no harm and is now planning future wars despite dwindling manpower and lack of money. Blair, for just going along, had to deal with savage, informed questions of a sort that Bush would never answer even if he were competent to do so.

So we have seen what democracy across the water can do. All in all a jarring experience for anyone foolish enough to believe that America is democratic in anything except furiously imprisoning the innocent and joyously electing the guilty. What to do? As a first step, I invite the radicals at C-SPAN who take seriously our Constitution and Bill of Rights to address their attention to the corruption of the presidential election of 2004, particularly in the state of Ohio.

One of the most useful members of the House—currently the most useful—is John Conyers, a Michigan Democrat who, in his capacity as ranking minority member of the Judiciary Committee, led the committee’s Democratic Congressmen and their staffers into the heart of the American heartland, the Western Reserve; specifically, into the not-so-red state of Ohio, once known as “the mother of Presidents.”

He had come to answer the question that the minority of Americans who care about the Republic have been asking since November 2004: “What went wrong in Ohio?” He is too modest to note the difficulties he must have undergone even to assemble this team in the face of the triumphalist Republican Congressional majority, not to mention the unlikely heir to himself, George W. Bush, whose original selection by the Supreme Court brought forth many reports on what went wrong in Florida in 2000.

These led to an apology from Associate Justice John Paul Stevens for the behavior of the 5-to-4 majority of the Court in the matter of Bush v. Gore. Loser Bush then brought on undeclared wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as the greatest deficits in our history and the revelations that the policies of an Administration that—much as Count Dracula fled cloves of garlic—flees all accountability were responsible for the murder and torture of captive men, between 70 percent and 90 percent of whom, by the Pentagon’s estimate, had been swept up at random, earning us the hatred of a billion Muslims and the disgust of what is called the civilized world.

Asked to predict who would win in ’04, I said that, again, Bush would lose, but I was confident that in the four years between 2000 and 2004 creative propaganda and the fixing of election officials might very well be so perfected as to insure an official victory for Mr. Bush. As Representative Conyers’s report, Preserving Democracy: What Went Wrong in Ohio (www.house.gov/conyers), shows in great detail, the swing state of Ohio was carefully set up to deliver an apparent victory for Bush even though Kerry appears to have been the popular winner as well as the valedictorian-that-never-was of the Electoral College.

I urge would-be reformers of our politics as well as of such anachronisms as the Electoral College to read Conyers’s valuable guide on how to steal an election once you have in place the supervisor of the state’s electoral process: In this case, Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell, who orchestrated a famous victory for those who hate democracy (a permanent but passionate minority). The Conyers Report states categorically, “With regard to our factual findings, in brief, we find that there were massive and unprecedented voter irregularities and anomalies in Ohio. In many cases these irregularities were caused by intentional misconduct and illegal behavior, much of it involving Secretary of State Kenneth J. Blackwell, the co-chair of the Bush-Cheney campaign in Ohio.” In other words, the Florida 2000 scenario redux, when the chair for Bush/Cheney was also the Secretary of State. Lesson? Always plan ahead for at least four more years.

It is well-known in the United States of Amnesia that not only did Ohio have a considerable number of first-time voters but that Blackwell and his gang, through “the misallocation of voting machines, led to unprecedented long lines that disenfranchised scores, if not hundreds of thousands, of predominantly minority and Democratic voters.”

For the past few years many of us have been warning about the electronic voting machines, first publicized on the Internet by investigator Bev Harris, for which she was much reviled by the officers of such companies as Diebold, Sequoia, Es & S, Triad; this last voting computer company “has essentially admitted that it engaged in a course of behavior during the recount in numerous counties to provide ‘cheat sheets’ to those counting the ballots. The cheat sheets informed election officials how many votes they should find for each candidate, and how many over and under votes they should calculate to match the machine count. In that way, they could avoid doing a full county-wide hand count mandated by state law.”

Yet despite all this manpower and money power, exit polls showed that Kerry would win Ohio. So, what happened?

I have told more than enough of this mystery story so thoroughly investigated by Conyers and his Congressional colleagues and their staffers. Not only were the crimes against democracy investigated, but the report on What Went Wrong in Ohio comes up with quite a number of ways to set things right.

Needless to say, this report was ignored when the Electoral College produced its unexamined tally of the votes state by state. Needless to say, no joint committee of the two houses of Congress was convened to consider the various crimes committed and to find ways and means to avoid their repetition in 2008, should we be allowed to hold an election once we have unilaterally, yet again, engaged in a war—this time with Iran. Anyway, thanks to Conyers, the writing is now high up there on the wall for us all to see clearly: “Mene, mene, tekel, upharsin.” Students of the Good Book will know what these words of God meant to Belshazzar and his cronies in old Babylon.
______________________________

Gore Vidal’s 'Imperial America' will be out in paperback this September.

commondreams.org



To: American Spirit who wrote (62701)6/9/2005 8:42:57 PM
From: Dan B.Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
Apparantly, even you don't remember the supposed evidence (evidence being far different from proof, mind you). Where's the meat and potatoes?

Dan B.



To: American Spirit who wrote (62701)6/12/2005 12:19:35 PM
From: Dan B.Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
By the by, though your link doesn't provide plenty of evidence at all, so far as I can tell, here's some meat and potatoes for you. Do you think anyone other than the gullible should buy into what I'm finding on that site concerning this? You need to get real here, your link contains a fellows "formal complaint" in which he expresses concern that "George W. Bush has never received any punishment for these alleged crimes..." LOL...what a nut, and I'm amazed that you, American Spirit have never received punishment for crimes I allege YOU have committed, LOL. The following will explain why Bush was never charged. His unit in Texas obviously got notice he'd attended his monthly meeting, and paid him. While your site moves from seeming to embrace the legal injustice of punishment based on allegtions only, to referencing statements claiming this:

"General William Turnipseed (r) who was commander of the unit at that time has stated in interviews that he never saw Bush report for duty."

and this: "There is no record that he attended any drills whatsoever."

....the reality is this:

msnbc.msn.com

""I don't remember whether he came or not. Our unit had about 900- 1,000 men and he could have attended many meetings without me ever knowing it," Turnipseed said this week.

As for Bush being AWOL, Turnipseed said, "No way. He was never assigned to our unit so he couldn't be AWOL. Like so many Guard and Reserve soldiers during the Vietnam War, they moved around and temporarily attended meetings with other units but Bush never left his original unit in Texas.”

Turnipseed has said all along there would be no mention of the president in the Alabama unit since Bush was paid out of Texas.

When asked about Bush’s pay record, Turnipseed said the paymaster in Alabama would note Bush attended a meeting and send the information onto Texas on what he described as an "IBM 105" card where it would be recorded and sent onto payroll in Colorado.

Bush was accused by Democrats of skipping meetings because there was no written record of him attending those meetings in October and November in Alabama.

On Tuesday, the White House released payroll records that showed the president received credit for attending meetings in October and November 1972.

The records don't indicate where he attended those meetings but he was living in Alabama at the time."

msnbc.msn.com

Oh yes, but you and yours will assume the "not yet famous" Bush, who'd done much more guard flying service time than required over 4 years of service, and whom we know put in a request that he be allowed, like so many others, to attend meetings at other units in other states, is guilty of dissertion. LOL And some general doesn't remember him from among some 900 men on some weekend exercise, and you will write that we all should KNOW he is guilty? LOL.

Dan B.



To: American Spirit who wrote (62701)6/12/2005 12:20:08 PM
From: longnshortRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
10,000 terrorists in Canada: report
Think-tank says most live peacefully, but could be activated at any time

David Pugliese
The Ottawa Citizen

Wednesday, July 09, 2003
ADVERTISEMENT

Police intelligence officers believe as many as 10,000 former Tamil guerrillas now live in Canada, just one example of how the country has become a haven for terrorists and others involved in wars around the globe, according to a new study by a Toronto-based think-tank.

Some of the Tamil guerrillas have joined street gangs in Toronto, says the report by the Mackenzie Institute, an organization that monitors political violence and terrorism.

In other cases, al-Qaeda members living in Montreal in the 1990s were already veterans of a guerrilla war in Algeria. Other ex-guerrillas, such as those from a Kurdish rebel group, were among rioters who hurled a Molotov cocktail at an RCMP sergeant in Ottawa during a February 1999 demonstration outside the Turkish Embassy, the institute notes.

"Some former combatants present a danger to Canadians," according to the study written by the institute's president, John Thompson, and researcher Joe Turlej. Mr. Turlej has since left the institute and now works as an intelligence analyst with a civilian police force.

In an interview, Mr. Thompson said many of the ex-guerrillas are living a peaceful existence for now, but could be reactivated by their former organizations.

He blamed Canada's failing immigration policies, as well as a lack of enforcement of existing laws, for having allowed the country to become home to terrorists and their front groups. Besides being a refuge for former guerrillas, the study notes that 15 out of 80 identified international terrorist groups have significant supporters or members in Canada.

Although the threat of substantial terrorist violence in Canada seems low, it is only a matter of time before the country is attacked, the report warns.

"While the United States, Israel, Britain, France, Singapore, and Australia have attracted more of the hostile attention of these groups than we have, a major action against Canada is inevitable at some time," according to the study.

Mr. Thompson said Canada has been slow to outlaw a number of active terrorist groups. It was only several weeks ago that the federal government added Babbar Khalsa to its list of terrorist organizations. The group is believed to be behind the 1985 Air India bombing, the worst mass murder in Canadian history.

There are now 31 groups outlawed under the government's Anti-Terrorism Act, which came into force three months after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the U.S.

Mr. Thompson noted that the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam is still not on Canada's list of terrorist groups, despite being banned in England and being described by the U.S. as a terrorist organization. The group is also included on the UN Security Council's list of terrorist individuals and entities.

Part of the problem, according to Mr. Thompson, is that front groups for such organizations have courted politicians on the federal and provincial scene, bringing them much- needed votes from ethnic communities. As a result, politicians are reluctant to act.

Mr. Thompson said at the same time, these front groups accuse anyone who suggests there is terrorist infiltration of ethnic groups of being racist or holding "un-Canadian" views.

"We have allowed the agents of the violence experienced in other nations to come here, mercilessly dominate their fellows from their home societies, and preach an Orwellian message that we must tolerate their intolerance, and that it is racist and condescending to question their motives and actions," the report states. "Worse still, some of our political leaders have accepted this message."

Three years ago, then-finance minister Paul Martin and his cabinet colleague Maria Minna, then the minister of international co-operation, were criticized for attending a fund-raising dinner held by an alleged Tamil Tigers front group. Municipal and provincial politicians were also among the attendees at the Toronto dinner.

When opposition MPs raised the issue in the Commons, they were denounced by Liberals as racists.

Mr. Thompson said it is not enough for government just to pass anti-terrorism laws; those measures have to be used.

Instead of applying the new laws to all terrorist groups in Canada, the federal government's use of a "list" of selected groups to be banned is embarrassing, Mr. Thompson said. "As partners in the 'War on Terrorism' we seem slow, timid and unsure of ourselves," the report adds.

© Copyright 2003 The Ottawa Citizen

canada.com